How much car insurance do I need?
Choosing the right amount of auto insurance is about balance. You want enough coverage to protect your savings, income, home, car, and future earnings, but you also do not want to overpay for coverage that does not fit your situation.
State minimum car insurance is usually the cheapest way to stay legal, but it is often not enough for a serious crash. Medical bills, auto repair costs, rental cars, legal claims, and property damage can exceed low limits quickly, leaving you personally responsible for the difference.
For many drivers, a practical starting point is 100/300/100 liability coverage: $100,000 bodily injury liability per person, $300,000 bodily injury liability per accident, and $100,000 property damage liability. Drivers with a home, strong savings, high income, teen drivers, or significant assets may need higher limits or an umbrella policy.
Table of Contents
- Quick Answer: How Much Auto Insurance Do You Need?
- Rules Table: Never Use / Use Instead
- Understanding Car Insurance Basics
- Recommended Liability Coverage Limits
- Why State Minimum Coverage Is Usually Not Enough
- Uninsured and Underinsured Motorist Coverage
- Do You Need Collision and Comprehensive Coverage?
- The 50% Rule for Dropping Collision and Comprehensive
- Should You Choose a $500 or $1,000 Deductible?
- When Umbrella Insurance Makes Sense
- How to Lower Premiums Without Gutting Protection
- Recommended Coverage by Driver Type
- Final Coverage Checklist
- Frequently Asked Questions
Quick Answer: How Much Auto Insurance Do You Need?
Most drivers should carry more than the state minimum. A good baseline is 100/300/100 liability coverage, plus uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage where available. If you own a home, have significant savings, or have a higher income, consider 250/500/250 or an umbrella policy.
Best Practical Starting Point
Carry as much liability coverage as you can reasonably afford, with 100/300/100 as a strong starting point for many households. If your net worth is higher than your policy limits, you may need higher limits or umbrella insurance.
| Coverage Type | Recommended Starting Point | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Bodily Injury Liability | 100/300 or higher | Pays for injuries you cause to others |
| Property Damage Liability | $100,000 or higher | Pays for vehicles, buildings, fences, poles, and other property you damage |
| Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist | Match liability limits if possible | Protects you if the at-fault driver has little or no insurance |
| Collision | Keep if the car is valuable, financed, leased, or expensive to replace | Pays for damage to your own vehicle after a crash |
| Comprehensive | Keep if the car is worth protecting from theft, weather, vandalism, fire, or animals | Covers non-crash damage to your car |
| Umbrella Insurance | Consider if you have significant assets or high liability exposure | Adds extra liability protection above auto and homeowners limits |
For more perspective, see Consumer Reports: How Much Car Insurance Do You Need? and Progressive: How Much Car Insurance Do I Need?.
Rules Table: Never Use / Use Instead
It is tempting to lower coverage limits to save money, but that can expose you to major financial risk after a serious accident.
| Never Use | Use Instead |
|---|---|
| State minimum coverage just because it is cheapest | Choose liability limits that protect your income, savings, home, and future earnings |
| Low property damage coverage in areas with expensive vehicles | Carry at least $100,000 in property damage liability if possible |
| No uninsured motorist coverage if your state allows it | Add UM/UIM coverage, ideally matching your liability limits |
| A deductible you cannot afford in an emergency | Choose the highest deductible you can comfortably pay out of pocket |
| Collision and comprehensive forever without checking vehicle value | Review whether the car’s value still justifies the premium and deductible |
| Asset protection based only on monthly premium | Match coverage to your real financial exposure after a crash |
Minimum Coverage Warning
Minimum legal coverage may keep you compliant with the law, but it may not protect you from lawsuits, wage garnishment, savings loss, or out-of-pocket bills after a serious accident.
Understanding Car Insurance Basics
To choose the right amount of coverage, start with the major parts of an auto insurance policy. Each coverage protects against a different risk.
Liability Insurance
Liability insurance pays for damage you cause to other people. Bodily injury liability helps pay for medical bills, lost wages, and injury claims. Property damage liability helps pay to repair or replace the vehicles or property you damage.
Liability insurance does not pay for damage to your own car. It protects you from claims made by others after you cause a crash.
Collision Insurance
Collision insurance pays for damage to your own vehicle after a crash, whether you hit another car, a guardrail, a pole, or another object. It usually comes with a deductible.
Comprehensive Insurance
Comprehensive insurance pays for damage to your vehicle that is not caused by a typical collision. This can include theft, vandalism, fire, hail, flooding, falling objects, and animal strikes.
Why Coverages Are Separate
Liability, collision, and comprehensive cover different risks. Separating them lets drivers choose the protection they need while insurers price each risk category separately.
Recommended Liability Coverage Limits
Liability limits are usually written as three numbers, such as 100/300/100. These numbers represent bodily injury per person, bodily injury per accident, and property damage per accident.
What 100/300/100 Means
- $100,000 bodily injury liability per person
- $300,000 bodily injury liability per accident
- $100,000 property damage liability per accident
When to Consider Higher Limits
If you own a home, have savings, drive frequently, live in a high-traffic area, have teen drivers, or have a high income, consider higher limits such as 250/500/250 or higher. The more you have to lose, the more liability protection you should consider.
Asset Protection Rule
Your insurance should ideally protect your net worth and future earnings. If a claim exceeds your policy limits, you may be personally responsible for the difference.
Why State Minimum Coverage Is Usually Not Enough
State minimum auto insurance limits are often low compared with today’s repair bills, vehicle prices, medical costs, and legal claims. One serious crash involving multiple vehicles or injuries can exceed minimum limits quickly.
| Accident Scenario | Why Minimum Coverage May Fail |
|---|---|
| You total a newer SUV or luxury vehicle | Low property damage limits may not cover the full vehicle value |
| You cause a multi-car crash | Property damage and injury claims can stack up quickly |
| Someone needs surgery or long-term care | Medical costs may exceed low bodily injury limits |
| You are sued after a serious crash | You may need liability limits high enough to protect assets |
If you are trying to control costs, it is usually better to compare quotes, raise deductibles carefully, use discounts, or review optional coverages than to cut liability limits down to the legal minimum.
Uninsured and Underinsured Motorist Coverage
Uninsured motorist coverage helps protect you if an at-fault driver has no insurance. Underinsured motorist coverage helps when the at-fault driver has insurance, but not enough to cover your losses.
This coverage can be especially important because you cannot control whether other drivers carry enough insurance. If you are injured by someone with low limits, your own UM/UIM coverage may help fill the gap.
UM/UIM Tip
If available and affordable, consider matching your uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage to your liability limits. It protects you and your passengers, not just other drivers.
For a deeper look, read Uninsured Motorist Coverage: Pros, Cons, and When It’s Actually Worth It and Uninsured Motorist Coverage.
Do You Need Collision and Comprehensive Coverage?
You probably need collision and comprehensive coverage if your car is financed or leased, because lenders usually require it. You may also want it if your car is worth enough that paying to repair or replace it would be financially painful.
Keep Collision and Comprehensive If:
- Your vehicle is financed or leased.
- Your car is newer or still valuable.
- You could not easily replace the car with cash.
- You live in an area with theft, hail, flooding, animal strikes, or vandalism risk.
- Your annual premium is reasonable compared with the car’s value.
You May Drop Them If:
- Your car is older and has low market value.
- The premium plus deductible is close to the car’s value.
- You have enough savings to replace the vehicle yourself.
- You no longer have a loan or lease requirement.
Paid-Off Car Rule
If your car is paid off, you are usually not required to carry collision and comprehensive. But dropping them only makes sense if you can afford to repair or replace the car yourself.
If your vehicle is declared a total loss, this guide can help: Totaled Car Insurance 101: All the Basics You Need to Know.
The 50% Rule for Dropping Collision and Comprehensive
The “50% rule” is a quick way to decide whether collision and comprehensive coverage are still worth paying for. It compares what you pay for coverage against the realistic payout you could receive after a claim.
Simple 50% Rule
If your annual collision and comprehensive premium plus your deductible equals 50% or more of your car’s current value, it may be time to consider dropping one or both coverages.
Example
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Car value | $4,000 |
| Annual collision and comprehensive premium | $900 |
| Deductible | $1,000 |
| Premium + deductible | $1,900 |
| 50% of car value | $2,000 |
In this example, the coverage is close to the 50% threshold. It may still be worth keeping if the driver cannot afford to replace the car, but it is a good time to review options.
Should You Choose a $500 or $1,000 Deductible?
A deductible is the amount you pay out of pocket before insurance pays on a covered claim. A higher deductible usually lowers your premium, but it also means you need more cash available after an accident.
| Deductible | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| $500 Deductible | Lower out-of-pocket cost after a claim | Higher monthly or annual premium |
| $1,000 Deductible | Lower premium and better savings over time if you avoid claims | Higher out-of-pocket cost after a crash, theft, or damage claim |
Deductible Rule
Choose a $1,000 deductible only if you can comfortably pay $1,000 on short notice. If that would create financial stress, a $500 deductible may be safer.
When Umbrella Insurance Makes Sense
Umbrella insurance adds extra liability protection above your auto and homeowners policy limits. It can help protect you from large lawsuits after a serious car accident, dog bite, injury on your property, or other covered liability claim.
Consider Umbrella Insurance If You:
- Own a home
- Have significant savings or investments
- Have a high income or strong future earning potential
- Have teen drivers in the household
- Own rental property
- Drive frequently or commute in heavy traffic
- Want extra protection above standard auto limits
Umbrella Coverage Tip
If your assets exceed your auto liability limits, ask your insurer about umbrella coverage. It may provide a large amount of extra liability protection for a relatively modest cost.
How to Lower Premiums Without Gutting Protection
You do not have to slash liability limits to save money. Try smarter premium-reduction strategies first.
- Compare quotes: Shop at least three insurers before renewal.
- Raise deductibles carefully: Increase deductibles only to an amount you can afford.
- Bundle policies: Auto and home bundles may reduce premiums.
- Ask for discounts: Safe driver, low mileage, good student, paid-in-full, defensive driving, and multi-car discounts may apply.
- Review collision and comprehensive: Older low-value cars may not need both.
- Use telematics if comfortable: Safe driving programs may lower costs for careful drivers.
- Keep credit and driving record clean: In many states, these can affect pricing.
For more savings strategies, read Is there a way to lower car insurance? and Telematics Insurance Savings.
Recommended Coverage by Driver Type
Your ideal coverage depends on your finances, vehicle, driving habits, and risk exposure.
| Driver Type | Recommended Coverage Approach |
|---|---|
| New driver or young driver | Strong liability limits, UM/UIM, collision and comprehensive if vehicle is valuable |
| Homeowner with savings | At least 100/300/100, consider 250/500/250 and umbrella insurance |
| Driver with older paid-off car | Strong liability and UM/UIM; review whether collision and comprehensive are still worth it |
| Driver with leased or financed car | Required liability limits plus collision and comprehensive; consider gap coverage if needed |
| Frequent commuter | Higher liability limits, UM/UIM, rental reimbursement, and solid collision coverage |
| Non-owner driver | Consider non-owner car insurance if you regularly drive but do not own a car |
If you do not own a car but still drive, see Non-Owner Car Insurance. For younger drivers, compare options in What age group has the cheapest car insurance?.
Final Coverage Checklist
Before choosing your policy limits, use this checklist to make sure you are not leaving major gaps.
- Check your state’s minimum requirements, but do not stop there.
- Start with at least 100/300/100 liability if you can afford it.
- Increase limits if you own a home, have savings, or have high income.
- Add uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage where available.
- Keep collision and comprehensive if your car is financed, leased, or valuable.
- Review collision and comprehensive on older cars using the 50% rule.
- Choose a deductible you can actually pay.
- Consider umbrella coverage if you have significant assets.
- Compare quotes before reducing protection.
- Review coverage every year or after major life changes.
Best Takeaway
Do not choose auto insurance based only on the cheapest premium. Choose limits that protect what you own, what you earn, and what you could lose after a serious crash.
If you need help understanding claims, read Will my car insurance premium go up if I file a claim? and Statute of Limitations for Car Accident Claims.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much car insurance coverage do I really need?
Many drivers should consider at least 100/300/100 liability coverage, plus uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage. If you own a home, have significant savings, or earn a higher income, consider higher limits such as 250/500/250 or an umbrella policy.
Do I really need comprehensive and collision?
You likely need comprehensive and collision if your car is financed, leased, newer, valuable, or expensive to replace. If your car is older and low-value, compare the annual premium plus deductible with the vehicle’s current value.
What is the 50% rule in car insurance?
The 50% rule says that if your annual collision and comprehensive premium plus your deductible equals 50% or more of your car’s current value, it may be time to consider dropping one or both coverages.
Is it better to have a $500 deductible or $1,000?
A $1,000 deductible usually lowers your premium, but you must be able to pay $1,000 after a claim. A $500 deductible costs more in premiums but is easier to handle if an accident happens.
At what point should I drop collision coverage?
Consider dropping collision when your car’s value is low, the premium and deductible are high compared with the car’s value, and you can afford to repair or replace the vehicle yourself.
Do I need comprehensive and collision if my car is paid off?
If your car is paid off, comprehensive and collision are usually optional. Keep them if the car is still valuable or hard to replace. Drop them only if the savings are worth the risk of paying for repairs yourself.
Should my liability limits match my net worth?
Your liability limits should ideally protect your assets and future income. If your net worth is higher than your auto liability limits, ask about higher limits or umbrella insurance.
Is uninsured motorist coverage worth it?
Uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage is often worth it because it protects you and your passengers if an at-fault driver has no insurance or not enough insurance to cover your injuries.






